Rylance’s performance is a masterclass in unease. He whispers his lines, punctuates his sentences with wet-lipped smacks, and smells the air like a bloodhound. Sully represents Maren’s possible future: a lonely, middle-aged predator preying on the kindness of strangers. “You don’t have to be alone,” he coos. But his definition of “together” is a cage.
Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross’s score is a departure from their usual industrial dread. Here, they deploy arpeggiated synths and trembling drones that evoke the melancholic pulse of ’80s ambient music. It is the sound of a heartbeat slowing down. It is the sound of two people driving toward a sunrise they might not live to see. Bones and All will provoke disgust. It is designed to. But the disgust is the point. Guadagnino is not asking you to condone cannibalism; he is using it as a metaphor for the parts of ourselves we cannot change. For some, that might be a mental illness, a forbidden desire, or a traumatic compulsion. For others, it is simply the knowledge that love, in its purest form, requires a kind of devouring. Bones and All
But the film is not interested in the mechanics of gore. Unlike the stylized excess of Raw or the survivalist grimness of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre , Guadagnino shoots the kills with a strange, anthropological distance. The violence is abrupt, ugly, and over in seconds. The true horror lies not in the act of eating, but in the loneliness that precedes it. Rylance’s performance is a masterclass in unease
That is not romance as Hollywood sells it. That is romance as a pact. And in a world that feels increasingly fragmented, isolating, and hungry for connection, Bones and All dares to suggest that even monsters deserve a love that consumes them whole. “You don’t have to be alone,” he coos